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CHAPTER VII. A HAIL IN THE NIGHT.
 For several days nothing of importance happened. Then came a storm and Clif was placed on the lookout1.  
“Sail O! Ship dead ahead! Look out, she’s——”
 
The startling cry, wafted2 aft from the forecastle by a sudden shifting of the gale3, came to an end just as the officer on watch awakened4 to the fact that something was wrong.
 
Grasping his trumpet5 more firmly, he peered through the gloom enshrouding the ship like a damp mist, and then bawled6, lustily:
 
“Foc’s’le, ahoy! What have you sighted?”
 
There was a commotion7 about the wet, littered decks. Crew and cadets slipped from their shelters and glanced anxiously out into the storm-tossed waste of waters. The executive officer, who had just retired8, hastily reappeared, armed with his nightglass, and silently took his station on the quarter-deck.
 
All waited breathlessly for the answer from forward. It was tardy9 in coming, and the executive officer snapped out:
 
“Forward, there! Why don’t you answer?”
 
A tall, slim figure, swathed in oilskins, swayed up to the speaker from beyond the foremast, and saluted11 as well as plunging12 deck would permit.
 
“I have investigated the matter, sir. The cry was given by a new fourth class cadet, acting13 as lookout on the starboard cathead. He fancied he saw a ship directly in front, and he gave the alarm.”
 
“What is his name?”
 
“Clifford Faraday, sir.”
 
“Humph! was he asleep?”
 
“I do not think so, sir.”
 
“He’s a bright lad, Mr. Watson,” interposed the officer of the watch. “I stationed him up there for that reason. He’s not the one to sleep on duty.”
 
“But he must have been dreaming to act in that manner,” impatiently replied the executive officer. “What did the other lookouts——”
 
“Ship ahoy! She’s dead ahead! Watch——”
 
The cry rang out sharply above the roaring of the gale, and, as before, it came to a sudden ending. There was a moment of silence, then the cadet officer of the forecastle, who had just made a report, exclaimed wonderingly:
 
“It’s Faraday again!”
 
Brandishing14 his telescope like a sword, the executive officer sprang forward, followed by the other officers and a score of men and cadets.
 
On reaching the forecastle they found Clif leaning far out over the rail, hanging with one hand from a stay.
 
He was peering eagerly through the gloom at a point just off the starboard bow.
 
“What is the matter here?” harshly exclaimed Lieutenant15 Watson. “Who gave that alarm?”
 
Clif turned and leaped lightly to the deck. One hand came up to the rim16 of his cap in prompt salute10, then he replied, in a clear, strong voice:
 
“I gave the alarm, sir.”
 
“What for?”
 
“Because I sighted a ship dead ahead, sir. We were almost on top of her when she disappeared.”
 
The executive officer made a gesture of impatience17.
 
“This is sheer nonsense, Mr. Faraday,” he exclaimed. “You have been dreaming.”
 
“Dreaming, sir?”
 
Clif drew himself up. His face, seen in the light cast by a hand lantern, reddened.
 
“Yes, dreaming. You have been asleep, sir,” insisted Lieutenant Watson, whose temper was not the best. “It is a grave breach18 of discipline, and I warn you to keep awake on watch in the future.”
 
“I beg your pardon, sir,” replied Clif, respectfully, but with firmness. “I must deny having been asleep. I have walked back and forth19 across decks during the whole watch. I passed the call at each bell, and I know I saw what I have claimed.”
 
“Where is it, then?”
 
Clif glanced out across the water, which foamed20 and leaped in giant billows under the force of the gale. The air was filled with flying spume, and rain beat downward with steady persistency21. It was a wild night.
 
The thick mist hemmed22 the ship in a black horizon, and naught23 was visible to the curious eyes of the group on the forecastle. Several of the cadets laughed, and one said in a tone plainly audible:
 
“He saw the Flying Dutchman, I guess.”
 
The words did not escape Clif, but he gave no sign of having heard them other than one quick glance at the speaker.
 
“I do not know where the ship is now, sir,” he replied, steadily24, to the executive officer’s question, “but I am certain I saw one. It was nothing but a hulk with two masts having curious round cages at the top. There weren’t any yards or sails visible.”
 
“You are describing a lightship, Faraday,” said Lieutenant Watson, smiling incredulously. “And there are none within fifty miles of us. Take my advice and do not cultivate the habit of riding nightmares on watch.”
 
With this last bit of sarcasm25 the officer walked aft and rejoined the officer of the deck.
 
“It is hard to believe such a manly26, clever cadet as Faraday would lie deliberately27 to get out of a scrape,” he said, “but it certainly looks as if he has been trying it. Fancy a lightship out here. Better take him off watch, or he’ll be keeping us awake all night. When do you change the course?”
 
“At eight bells, sir. It is almost that time now. Good-night, sir.”
 
“Rather good-morning. There would be a glimpse of dawn in the sky if it wasn’t for this confounded gale.”
 
Lieutenant Watson crossed the slippery, tossing deck to the break of the cabin, and glanced at the clock back of the wheel.
 
The hands indicated ten minutes of four.
 
With a sigh for the sleep he had lost, he went below to turn in. Five minutes later he was buried in a slumber28.
 
In the meantime Clif had been relieved from his post on the forecastle. When the cadet officer in charge, a first classman, curtly29 bade him give way to another plebe, he silently obeyed, but it was evident he felt the disgrace keenly.
 
“Don’t you care, Clif,” spoke30 up Joy, who had formed one of the group. “Such mistakes are common.”
 
“But it wasn’t a mistake, Joy,” replied Faraday, earnestly. “I am as certain I saw that ship twice as I am that I stand here.”
 
“Did it look like a lightship?” queried31 a smaller lad.
 
“I guess so, Nanny. The first luff said I described one. Whew! it was a peculiar32 experience. My flesh is creepy yet. I thought we would plump into her for certain.”
 
“Tell us all about it, old fellow,” chorused several plebes of the watch.
 
“It bad here,” spoke up Trolley33. “Me think we blow away pretty soon. This one lulu of a gale. It peacherine.”
 
“Right you are, Trolley,” laughed Clif. “The strength of the wind is only equaled by the force of your slang. We will take refuge in the lee of the bulwarks34 down below.”
 
The rest scurried35 to the main deck, but he remained a moment clinging to the railing, and searchingly swept the sea with his eyes.
 
“I can’t make it out to save me,” he murmured. “I was not asleep or dreaming. I saw that vessel36 as sure as fate. But why didn’t the others see it, too? Spendly was on watch on the other side of the deck. He—— Why, by Jove! probably he was asleep! It’s certainly mysterious.”
 
The old Monongahela pitched and rolled heavily in the seas. The gale shrieked37 unceasingly through the taut38 rigging. Monster waves, wind blown and angry, leaped against the stout39 wooden hull40 as if eager to drag it apart. Flying masses of vapor41, dank and salty, scudded42 through the air, and in the midst of it all the driving rain poured with a sleet-like sharpness against the faces of the watch on deck.
 
Ten hours previous the practice ship passed the capes43 of the Chesapeake.
 
Moderately fair weather had suddenly given way to a sharp squall shortly before dark, and this had changed by midnight to a gale which promised to last until morning.
 
Clif, with several of his plebe friends, had gone on watch at four bells—two o’clock—and it was while he was acting as lookout on the starboard side of the forecastle that he insisted he had sighted a vessel dead ahead.
 
He felt rather downcast when he finally left the forecastle and rejoined his chums under the lee of the port bulwarks. Lieutenant Watson’s sarcastic44 words hurt him. And especially so, as he considered them entirely45 undeserved.
 
That he had really seen a vessel almost within a cable’s length of the Monongahela he was positive. But why had not others seen it? And why did the ship disappear so mysteriously and suddenly?
 
Clif was not superstitious46, nor did he place any faith in the tales of the old sailors, but his flesh crept as he cast one last glance at the raging seas, and he welcomed with gladness Nanny’s cheery voice.
 
“Hello, chum! See anything more of your Dutchman?” laughed the little lad.
 
“That’s what Judson Greene called it,” said Joy, gloomily. “He’s always trying to say mean things. Why can’t he be peaceful, and not always attempt to stir up trouble? Why ain’t he like me? When I have it in for a fellow, do I go around casting sneering47 remarks? No, indeedy! I act like a peaceful man and a Christian48. I simply swat him one with a club, or beat the blooming head off him.”
 
“Hurray!” giggled49 the Japanese youth. “You bully50 boy after my own—my own—what you call him?”
 
“Liver!” suggested a lad named Toggles, gravely.
 
“Perhaps he means after his own gizzard?” slyly observed Nanny.
 
There was a general laugh at Trolley’s expense, and he laughed the loudest of all. Nothing could shake his good nature.
 
Clif stooped down and, leaning upon a broadside gun, glanced thoughtfully through the crack of the port shutter51.
 
“Still looking for your ship?” asked Toggles, sympathetically, at his elbow.
 
“Yes. But, to tell the truth, I don’t know whether I care to see it again or not,” was the grave reply.
 
“Why not, chum? It seems to me that if it was sighted again it would clear you of any suspicion. What is your reason for not wanting to see it?”
 
Clif did not reply at once. Resting against the polished breech of the heavy gun, he continued to gaze into the dark wall of mist. Presently he spoke, and his serious tone surprised his hearers.
 
“Chums,” he said, “do you know I believe there is some mystery connected with that strange-looking ship?”
 
“A mystery?” echoed Nanny, wonderingly.
 
“Yes. I am positive I saw it just as I described it to Lieutenant Watson. I was standing52 near the heel of the bowsprit looking ahead, when, suddenly there came a flash of lightning, and before the glare died away, I saw a peculiar-looking hull, battered53 and worn, with two masts clear of yards and sails. At each top was a queer, round object shaped like a barred cage. As far as I could see there was no one on board, and the vessel seemed—— Heavens! what was that?”
 
Clif’s description ended in an exclamation54 of profound amazement55. There was good cause for it. Suddenly, and without warning, a horrible scream, blood-curdling in its intensity56, sounded through the length and breadth of the practice ship.
 
It was not uttered by any on board, but seemed to come from off the port beam. There was an instant of breathless silence, then, just as the crew, aroused and horrified57, rushed from below, a second terrible cry arose above the whistling of the gale.
 
The men at the wheel were so startled that, stanch58 seamen59 though they were, they involuntarily released the spokes60. There was not much canvas exposed to the wind, merely the topsails and storm staysails, close-reefed, but there was enough spread to send the ship almost aback.
 
The captain, hurrying from his cabin, grasped the situation at once. A sharp word of command brought the sailors to a sense of their duty, and they hurled61 themselves upon the wheel just in time to keep the Monongahela from broaching62 to.
 
As she staggered around, trembling under the force of the gale, there suddenly came a startling cry from amidships.
 
“Ship abeam63! Look! She is almost on us!”
 
The voice was Clif’s, and the lad, dimly revealed in the faint light of dawn, was standing upon the lower port main shrouds64, pointing with shaking hand to where, lurching wildly toward the practice ship, was a grim, weather-beaten hull, with two bare masts, having cage-like objects in the tops.
 
The next moment there was a terrific crash and grinding of timbers; then, as the Monongahela reeled with the shock, the strange ship staggered away, that weird65 scream echoing from her deck.

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